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Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, November 13

Morning and Evening: Daily Readings

Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, November 13

Imported boundary: Evening, November 13 from CCEL's all-text Morning and Evening cache. CCEL navigation, month link lists, reader-start-page note, scripture index, and page apparatus are not mirrored.

Scripture heading: Luke 18:1.

> "Men ought always to pray."

If men ought always to pray and not to faint, much more Christian men. Jesus has sent his church into the world on the same errand upon which he himself came, and this mission includes intercession. What if I say that the church is the world's priest? Creation is dumb, but the church is to find a mouth for it. It is the church's high privilege to pray with acceptance. The door of grace is always open for her petitions, and they never return empty-handed. The veil was rent for her, the blood was sprinkled upon the altar for her, God constantly invites her to ask what she wills. Will she refuse the privilege which angels might envy her? Is she not the bride of Christ? May she not go in unto her King at every hour? Shall she allow the precious privilege to be unused? The church always has need for prayer. There are always some in her midst who are declining, or falling into open sin. There are lambs to be prayed for, that they may be carried in Christ's bosom? the strong, lest they grow presumptuous; and the weak, lest they become despairing. If we kept up prayer-meetings four-and-twenty hours in the day, all the days in the year, we might never be without a special subject for supplication. Are we ever without the sick and the poor, the afflicted and the wavering? Are we ever without those who seek the conversion of relatives, the reclaiming of back-sliders, or the salvation of the depraved? Nay, with congregations constantly gathering, with ministers always preaching, with millions of sinners lying dead in trespasses and sins; in a country over which the darkness of Romanism is certainly descending; in a world full of idols, cruelties, devilries, if the church doth not pray, how shall she excuse her base neglect of the commission of her loving Lord? Let the church be constant in supplication, let every private believer cast his mite of prayer into the treasury.

Source and provenance

Citation: Charles H. Spurgeon, Morning and Evening: Daily Readings, Spurgeon Morning and Evening: Evening, November 13, CCEL all-text cache, accessed 2026-07-07. Source URL: https://ccel.org/ccel/spurgeon/morneve/cache/morneve.html3#d1113pm

Original work: public-domain nineteenth-century devotional readings by Charles H. Spurgeon

Digital source: Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL)

Edition status: Needs verification

Proof texts: Proof references present

Scripture refs: LUK.18.1

Source provider: Christian Classics Ethereal Library (CCEL)

Use guidance: quote-ok

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